HEI 
. 13 and ac canton vB 5gt inhabitants, i in 32 com. 
_ munes. ie lat. 51° 2'. E. lon 
~ HEINSIU ¢ ee in eagle was born at Ghent 
in 1580. Onaccount of the troubles in the Low Countries, 
’ ” father, who was.attached to the principles of the reforma- 
‘tiony took. his family firft to England, and then to Holland, 
. aid he fettled at the Hague. “Here and at Zealand Daniel 
received his education. Ata very early age he difplayed 
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Adolphus, and that of F night of St. Mark at Venice. He 
was offered confiderable preferment by pope Urb ban VIII. 
commen- 
tator he-publifhed notes on n Silos Italicus, and the New Tef- 
tament. He gave new editions of Horace, Seneca’s tra- 
gedies, Hefiod, Maximus Tyrius, Theocritus, Theophraf- 
* tus, and others. As an original author his Latin poems 
. are efteemed, and gave him the reputation of being 
~ one of the belt compofers of Latin verfe among his contem- 
poraries. Thefe have gone through many editions. He pro- 
ed.on various occafions Latin orations, which were 
: e preceding, was born at 
* 4eyden in 1620, and having the advantage of his father’s 
ions, he was, at the e age of feyenteen, connected with 
ie of the ee fcholars of Be mre. When ie was 
in his twenty-firit 
nh 
fet out ona new journey through France and Tidy, 
ee: of purchafing MSS, and medals for Chrif- 
 Feturn he 
for 
of his father and re 
ceived she a ointment of | 
the city of Amfterdam, a 
publdhed:at Am- 
is life, aa publithed his 
which are highly — for purtiy of ftyle. 
HEI 
HEIR, formed of the Latin heres, of the ai 
cy in 
The inftitution of an heir i is a “a circumftance secellary to 
the validity of a teftament 
heré are two principal kinds af heirs, the apparent and 
prefumptive. 
Heir Apparent, is he on whom the fucceffion is fo fettled,. 
eed he cannot be fet afide without altering the laws of fuc- 
: or, whofe right of in —— is yp sense pro- 
vided he outlives the anceftor ; ; as t fon or his iffue, . 
who muft by the courfe ef the common lawhe heir to the: 
—_ whenever he happens - dies 
e peg is ve who, if the anceftor fhould die 
rekisnaaee as a 
former ieee “er eftate fhall hes 
a pofthumous-fon.. Bro. zit. De/e. ‘8. 
Here, in Common Law, is he who fucceeds, by Tight of 
blood, - any man tata, or:tenements in fee. 
For nothing, paffes'in.common law, jure hereditatis, by 
right of. iho tenee. but fee. 
common law, therefo ote; aman cannot be heir to goods 
on chattels =: for oft dicitur ab. hareditate, it is the: 3 ats 
ance ee s the heir. 
‘heir having: lands by cet) is bound by: the ads. 
of his aaceftors; if - he be named ;. 
ui _fentit ie ese jentire debet et onus. 
fo uch land ca 
ater 
crass that are farina Siege f being. heirs are baftards,. 
aliens, rfons attained for treafon or Bloay, (fee At 
TAIN ones but idiots and ei: fs od excommu 
or that are attainted ina utlaws in. debt, &e. are. 
capable of being 
¢ heiris- favoured by common law; for-not not only land, 
but rent not due and in arrear at the death of the ancettor,. 
fhall go to ‘the heir ; 1 fo corn 2 lyetee by a tenant fs years, , 
where his ay expires” is corn is ripe, an amy, 
to the freehold, timber-tree end be! Z 
a deer, igeon & he 
to rida > conies, P 1Sy c. go tot 
4 de over lands fallen to on by de 
cution fhall be had againft him to the value of the 
| oe &e. if it be not fold Lond fide before the a@tion brought, . 
in which cafe there is a faving by the ftat. 3& 4 Will. & 
, Mary, cap. 14. and it hall be by ajury, whether the - 
: ie tact lacie; aai-whent: in. viel value, in order ta 
Aber anfwerable. A creditor may fue either the 
tor, each of whom i is 
he 2 : 
the myriaia aar to pay debts out of the. perfonal -ef 
in order to w prof de inberiaac fee and where an exe- 
cutor 
